How Global Collaboration
Lessons from International Practice — Adapting global frameworks without sacrificing institutional autonomy, academic integrity, or contextual relevance.
Global Education | Entrepreneurship | Cross-Cultural Learning
The borderless classroom is not a futuristic speculation or a pandemic-induced adjustment. It is the lived present — and its expansion is both technologically feasible and pedagogically imperative. The question is no longer whether higher education will globalise, but whether it will do so with intention, equity, and imagination.
Standing at the front of a virtual lecture room at EM Normandie Business School in France, I often watch an extraordinary moment unfold: students from different nationalities logging in from Caen or Paris, eyes bright with anticipation, exchanging ideas with entrepreneurs dialling in from Lagos, Mexico, and the USA. In one session, a group of students debates strategy with a Nigerian EdTech founder; in another, they discuss business models with a Mexican venture capital founder tackling the problems entrepreneurs face in emerging markets. These interactions, occurring in real time across continents, embody a new paradigm in education — one where geography ceases to confine learning, and cultures, markets, and minds intersect to create a richer, more dynamic educational experience. Traditional classrooms confined by physical walls and curricula tied to single national contexts are increasingly giving way to pedagogical models that embrace international collaboration and digital connectivity. At the heart of this transformation lies virtual exchange — an educational methodology that leverages digital technologies to facilitate international learning without requiring physical travel, equipping students with digital literacy, global competencies, cross-cultural communication, and collaborative problem-solving skills that employers consistently identify as essential for the 21st-century workforce.
My own journey into this borderless educational space began when I was invited to teach Entrepreneurship in Emerging Markets as a Visiting Lecturer at EM Normandie — a course designed to equip students with both the analytical frameworks and the practical sensibilities required to understand, support, and lead ventures in contexts fundamentally different from those of the developed world. Grounded in institutional theory, market failure analysis, and the concept of innovation under constraint, the course immerses students in the lived realities of emerging market entrepreneurship through live case studies featuring founders operating in Lagos, Jakarta, and São Paulo. Students analyse real market-entry challenges, evaluate startup pitches, and simulate decisions faced by entrepreneurs under conditions of profound uncertainty. The central argument the course advances is one that many students educated within Western business school curricula have rarely encountered: emerging markets are not peripheral to the future of global entrepreneurship — they are central to it. Mobile money in Kenya, renewable energy off-grid solutions in India, and frugal engineering in Brazil did not emerge despite their contexts but because of them. To teach entrepreneurship exclusively through the lens of developed markets is not merely incomplete; it is a distortion of where entrepreneurial energy, demographic momentum, and economic dynamism now reside.
“What remains with students, long after the specific cases fade, is the humility that comes from genuine encounter and the confidence that comes from navigating complexity they once found illegible. In a world defined by difference, these may be the most portable skills of all.”
While entrepreneurial knowledge forms the explicit curriculum, the more enduring outcome is the development of cross-cultural intelligence — deliberately architected into every module, assignment, and synchronous exchange. Students arrive accustomed to certain baseline expectations about how economies function: reliable electricity, enforceable contracts, formal credit systems. When an entrepreneur from Lagos describes operating a logistics business amid chronic grid failure, or a founder in Dhaka explains how trust compensates for weak contract enforcement, students are forced to reckon with the provincialism of their own frameworks. From this unsettling of assumptions emerge empathy, active listening, and cultural humility — the recognition that one’s own cultural positioning is partial, that expertise in one context does not automatically transfer to another, and that genuine cross-cultural collaboration requires sustained openness to being taught by others. Virtual exchange makes this possible at scale. Traditional models requiring physical travel are inherently limited in scale and accessible primarily to students with financial means. Virtual exchange achieves global learning at a fraction of the cost: every student enrolled in Entrepreneurship in Emerging Markets participates in multiple live sessions with entrepreneurs across three continents. No travel budget is required. No student is excluded on financial grounds. When a student in Le Havre can learn as directly from a founder in Lagos as from a professor at a podium, the geography of knowledge has fundamentally shifted.
The implications for business schools and higher education policymakers are structural, strategic, and urgent. Institutions must move beyond the episodic invocation of practitioners as guest speakers and instead integrate entrepreneurs systematically into curricula as co-educators. Virtual exchange must be institutionalised rather than remaining the province of individual faculty, requiring dedicated staff to cultivate global practitioner networks, technical support for synchronous cross-border sessions, and formal recognition of virtual exchange facilitation as legitimate academic service. North–South academic partnerships must shift from extraction to reciprocity, with co-designed curricula and material benefit accruing to entrepreneurs and institutions on both sides. And faculty reward structures must align with internationalization commitments, recognizing pedagogical innovation as genuinely as peer-reviewed publication. The borderless classroom is not a temporary adaptation; it is the emerging baseline for relevant business education in an interconnected century. Students educated within this paradigm emerge not merely more knowledgeable about global markets, but qualitatively different kinds of thinkers and actors — adaptive leaders, ethical entrepreneurs, and global problem-solvers who have practiced, under guided conditions, the very collaboration across difference that the grand challenges of our century demand. This is the vision: education not as knowledge transmission, but as transformation.
References
- O’Dowd, R. (2018). From telecollaboration to virtual exchange: State-of-the-art and the role of UNICollaboration in moving forward. Research-publishing.net.
- Deardorff, D. K. (2006). Identification and assessment of intercultural competence as a student outcome of internationalization. Journal of Studies in International Education, 10(3), 241–266.
- Prahalad, C. K. (2008). The fortune at the bottom of the pyramid: Eradicating poverty through profits. McKinsey Briefing Notes.
- Bruton, G. D., Ahlstrom, D., & Li, H. L. (2010). Institutional theory and entrepreneurship: Where are we now and where do we need to move? Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 34(3), 421–440.
- Christensen, C. M., Ojomo, E., & Dillon, K. (2019). The Prosperity Paradox: How Innovation Can Lift Nations Out of Poverty. HarperBusiness.
- UNESCO. (2015). Global Citizenship Education: Topics and Learning Objectives. UNESCO Publishing.
About the Author
Dr. Akintoye Akindele, CFA, FICA, DBA is Founder & Chairman of Platform Capital, a growth-markets investment firm with portfolios across five continents and over 160 investments across nine verticals. He holds a DBA (Finance) from the International School of Management, Paris, is a CFA Charterholder, and has attended executive programmes at London Business School and Said Business School, Oxford. He lectures at the University of Lagos Business School and serves as Professor of Entrepreneurship in Emerging Markets at EM Normandie Business School, France. Founder of the philanthropic foundation Diatom Impact, which has touched more than one million lives, he is also a co-author of the USA Today and Wall Street Journal bestseller Quitless and author of A Love Affair with Failure. He was honoured with the African Business Leadership Impact Award at the 15th ABLA Africa Summit in London (2025) and named among the 25 Visionary Professionals to Follow in 2026.